Musonda shortlisted for ICC award

05 Nov, 2021 - 07:11 0 Views
Musonda shortlisted for ICC award Mary-Anne Musonda

Suburban

ZIMBABWE senior national women’s team captain Mary-Anne Musonda has been nominated for the ICC Player of the Month for October.

Musonda is in the running for the award with the Irish pair of Laura Delany and Gaby Lewis. The three were selected based on their impressive performance in the recent One Day International series pitting Ireland and Zimbabwe.

Musonda wrote her own piece of history when she became the first woman cricketer to score a century for Zimbabwe. The ODI series was Zimbabwe’s first official series after the Lady Chevrons were granted ODI status by the ICC earlier this year.

Shakib Al Hasan of Bangladesh, Asif Ali (Pakistan) and David Wiese of Namibia were shortlisted for the men’s ICC Player of the Month for October.

Winners are announced every second Monday of the month on the ICC’s digital platforms.

Musonda’s century on a winning One-Day International (ODI) debut for the Lady Chevrons gave hope for a distinctly brighter future after two years of difficulties for women’s cricket.

Musonda, who scored an unbeaten 103 in the win over Ireland, has been with the side through the best and worst of times but is now finally looking forward with optimism. Not just on the pitch but off it too, since Zimbabwe are hosting the global qualifying tournament for the 2022 Women’s Cricket World Cup in November and December.

“It’s been a rollercoaster to be frank,” Musonda told BBC Sport Africa.

“When I look back at the path we’ve been on since 2019, we have all the more reason to celebrate now.”

The ride continued when Zimbabwe lost the second of their four ODI’s against Ireland, with Musonda brought back to earth when managing just four runs.

Yet resilience is a feature of this side as Musonda and her team-mates could easily have thrown in the towel many times over.

The Lady Chevrons missed out on the 2019 World T20 global qualifiers when Zimbabwe Cricket was suspended by the International Cricket Council (ICC) for government interference on the eve of their departure. 

Then 2020 seemed a wasted year with inactivity because of Covid-19 and their trip to the global qualifying stage for the 50-over Women’s World Cup being called off in July last year as the tournament was postponed.

Musonda still recalls the last-minute cancellation of their trip to the global T20 qualifier in Scotland in 2019, having hosted and won the African qualifier.

“I can vividly remember the disappointment, how helpless we were as well, because nothing would change for us in that moment – it was a bitter moment,” she said.

“Then 2020 was another year of not doing anything. It always felt like each time we were supposed to go on tour, something would happen.

“Competition is what makes you better, what you look forward to. When it’s taken away from you on two occasions, it left us disappointed.”

The team was granted ODI status by the ICC in April, meaning that they now play at the highest level in women’s cricket.

And how Musonda shone in the team’s first one-dayer, playing a variety of strokes in a four-wicket win against Ireland in Harare.

“It was like all the negative emotions of the past two years were behind us, and to win and for me to get a century was amazing,” she smiled.

“It would have been easy to give up our dream.” 

For Musonda it seems the spirit of not giving up is about to lead to recognition for her outstanding performance.

Musonda also recently spoke about Zimbabwe’s hosting of the Women’s World Cup global qualifier in November and December with 10 teams taking part. The top three teams go to next year’s finals.

With the likes of Pakistan, West Indies and Sri Lanka taking part in the tournament, it will be a challenge for Zimbabwe, but Musonda is hopeful and the forthcoming matches offer another platform for the Zimbabwean captain and her team mates to get more recognition.

“It means a lot to be hosting, and playing in our home conditions will be an advantage,” she said. “Getting the ODI status and winning our first game puts us in a good place in terms of giving us confidence.

“Playing the qualifiers as home is a boost, we are in the right direction, we hope we are going to continue on a positive trajectory, and that we will keep learning a lot of lessons along the way.”

“We’ve stuck together as a team, and we must keep dreaming, keep believing and keep moving forward – it could have been easy for us to give up on our dream two years ago.”

The Lady Chevrons eventually slumped to a 3-1 series defeat to Ireland after an 85-run defeat in the fourth and final One Day International at Harare Sports Club but Musonda took away the positives in ahead of the Women’s World Cup global qualifier. — BBC Africa Sport/classic263.co.zw/Suburban Reporter

Share This:

Sponsored Links

Survey


We value your opinion! Take a moment to complete our survey
<div class="survey-button-container" style="margin-left: -104px!important;"><a style="background-color: #da0000; position: fixed; color: #ffffff; transform: translateY(96%); text-decoration: none; padding: 12px 24px; border: none; border-radius: 4px;" href="https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/ZWTC6PG" target="blank">Take Survey</a></div>

This will close in 20 seconds